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This was not a game that tested the Packers' resolve or slayed the demons that swirled out of Lambeau Field after last year's ugly divisional-round loss to the New York Giants. But it did serve as a nice tune-up that sets up a trip to Candlestick Park to face the San Francisco 49ers next week.

The Packers were handed a huge advantage long before the opening kickoff when it was announced Vikings quarterback Christian Ponder would be inactive because of an elbow injury. That meant Joe Webb would be the man under center, and it went about as well as you'd expect for a young quarterback who didn't throw a pass during the regular season.

The Vikings actually moved the ball on their first possession, using Webb's speed in a read-option attack. Coach Leslie Frazier made the odd decision to abandon that strategy as the game progressed, but it's certainly something to keep in mind with Colin Kaepernick up next for Green Bay.

Aaron Rodgers, meanwhile, looked as smooth and locked in as ever. He completed 14 of 18 passes for 205 yards in the first half before the Packers went into burn-the-clock mode for much of the final two quarters. Rodgers won't win the NFL MVP award this season, but he's still the most dangerous player in this tournament.

Now the Packers go from one end of the spectrum to the other. The Vikings were happy just to make the playoffs. The 49ers -- like the Packers themselves -- view anything short of a Super Bowl berth as failure. Game on.